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Can online mindfulness and self-compassion training improve quality of life for patients with atopic dermatitis?


 

FROM JAMA DERMATOLOGY

Online format may give more patients access to treatment

“With relatively limited data in the literature, this particularly well-done, important study is likely to positively shape thinking around this topic,” said Dr. Lio, of the departments of dermatology and pediatrics at Northwestern University, Chicago. “This study nicely demonstrates that an online approach can be effective.

“In theory, these methods or techniques could democratize treatments like this, and open them up to many more patients,” he added. He would like to see partially or entirely automated apps (free of cost), similar to meditation “apps,” to treat patients more cost-effectively.

Dr. Lio explained that excluding participants on dupilumab (Dupixent) makes the results slightly less generalizable to patients with moderate to severe AD, who may have the most serious QOL challenges and who are often candidates for dupilumab.

“However, given that we almost never have all the known variables for a study, we are generally comfortable extrapolating that the intervention would likely be helpful for patients taking dupilumab as well, despite it not being specifically evaluated in that group,” he said.

Susan Massick, MD, of the department of dermatology at the Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center in Columbus, advises clinicians to take a multipronged approach to treating the physical and behavioral components of AD and to embrace therapies beyond prescription medications.

“Self-compassion training is another tool in our toolbox toward finding the right fix for our patients,” Dr. Massick said by email. She was not involved with this research.

“I applaud the focus of this study on behavioral health training as a means toward wellness and improved mindfulness,” she added. “I was impressed by the extent to which these simple measures helped improve the quality of life for patients who used the training.”

U.S. patients can benefit from these findings

“My sense is that AD patients the world over have many similar characteristics and concerns, so I would anticipate that the results would be comparable in a U.S. population,” Dr. Lio said. “Other studies performed in the U.S. also support this line of thinking.”

Although the study involved highly motivated patients in Japan, the suffering that patients with AD experience is universal regardless of race or ethnicity, Dr. Massick said. “Americans may be even more willing to embrace mindfulness and self-compassion training as a path toward better health and wellness.”

The study was funded by the Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development and the Mental Health Okamoto Memorial Foundation, the KDDI Foundation, the Pfizer Health Research Foundation, and the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science.

Dr. Kishimoto and several coauthors report relevant financial relationships with pharmaceutical companies. Dr. Lio reports financial relationships with Sanofi and Regeneron, the joint developers of dupilumab. Dr. Massick reports no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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